Product Details
King of California

King of California
Directed by Mike Cahill (VI)

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Product Description

At the age of sixteen Miranda (Evan Rachel Wood) has already had to live with her share of disappointments. Abandoned by her mother she s dropped out of school and has been supporting herself as an employee at McDonald s while her father Charlie (Michael Douglas) resides in a mental institution.When Charlie is released and sent back to their home Miranda finds the relatively peaceful existence she s built for herself completely disrupted. Charlie has become obsessed with the notion that the long-lost treasure of Spanish explorer Father Juan Florismarte Garces is buried somewhere near their suburban California housing unit. Armed with a metal detector and a stack of treasure-hunting books Charlie soon finds reason to believe that the gold resides underneath the local Costco and encourages Miranda to get a job there so that they can plan a way to excavate after hours.Initially skeptical Miranda soon finds herself joining in Charlie s questionable antics in an effort to give him one last shot at accomplishing his dreams in this darkly funny exciting and surprisingly hopeful take on the modern family and the American dream.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: COMEDY/ROMANTIC COMEDY UPC: 687797117793 Manufacturer No: FLP-11779


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #13117 in DVD
  • Brand: FIRST LOOK HOME ENTERTAINMENT
  • Released on: 2008-01-29
  • Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.66:1
  • Formats: AC-3, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: English, Spanish
  • Subtitled in: Spanish
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: 1.00 pounds
  • Running time: 93 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Michael Douglas is such a great dramatic actor (not to mention villain) that it's worth remembering what a strong comedic performer he can be (War of the Roses, Romancing the Stone). In King of California, he digs into his offbeat lighter role with relish and vigor. Yet he softens the scene-chewing with appropriate poignancy, given that he's playing a mentally ill deadbeat who's essentially left his daughter to raise herself--and him. Douglas plays Charlie, a troubled yet good-humored musician who's just been released from institutional care. Evan Rachel Wood is his wise-beyond-her-years daughter, Miranda, who pays the bills, keeps house, and even buys a car as an unlicensed 15-year-old. The film examines the bond between troubled dad and grounded teen, and it's to both actors' credit that the slight (and slightly incredulous) plot doesn't diminish the impact of their love or anguish.

Charlie's convinced a buried Spanish treasure lies beneath the local Costco (one of many companies given costar billing; others include McDonald's, Petco, Target, and Chuck E. Cheese). The plot follows Charlie's single-minded, impossible-dream journey, while the world-weary Miranda is resigned to following ("Time to get on that old bipolar pony and ride," she mutters). But along the way, dad and daughter find true ways to reconnect, and therein lies the true majesty of King of California --A.T. Hurley


Customer Reviews

Pass the Quirk Please5
An enjoyable goofy story involving an independent daughters love and support for her crazy like a fox, cynical father, Michael Douglas. His role is a cross between Don Quiote and Long John Silver. This is an entertaining film.

A search for gold5
Michael Douglas (Charlie) and Evan Rachel Wood (Miranda) both give sterling performances in this quirky and funny tale of a schizophrenic father (Douglas). Miranda, "always the responsible one in the family" picks up Charlie from the local mental institution where he has been recovering from mental illness for two years only to find out he has devised his craziest scheme ever: finding the treasure of a Spanish Padre buried circa 1624 in a water cave which now is located beneath a Costco's.

Miranda, 15 years old when Charlie was institutionalized and now 17, has been taking care of herself working at McDonald's, and doing very well. She is slowly drawn into her father's scheming to find the treasure, a quest which is guided by the diary of the Spanish Padre across a golf course, construction sites, a grass farm to name a few places and ultimately Costco's where Miranda takes a job giving samples of chowder so she can case the place.

After drilling through several feet of concrete of the Costco floor at night, Charlie's dreaming is vindicated but not without the loss of his life. But he leave a surprise in a dishwasher which Miranda buys at the Costco. Opening up the dishwasher at a remote spot on the California coast, the shine of gold lights her face. And Chinese boys swim out of the serf into California, illegal immigrants, another "crazy" dream of Charlie's that turns out to be true.

I might note that this is the most heavily "Brand Name" laden movie I have ever seen. McDonald's, Phillips, Makita, Applebie's, Costco, Coca Cola, and many other cooperate titles or brand names are flashed. There was a time not so long ago that one never saw a brand name on the screen. Directors even went to great lengths to hide them. I did find this using of a fine movie to raise our awareness of Corporate names distracting. The director, with a bit of effort could have made these Corporate names into a creative and complimentary aspect of this movie.

I find this trend disturbing, and all movie lovers should be concerned. Our consent to watch a movie does not include consent to have advertising displayed during the movie which this amounts to. It will only be when movie lovers either stop going to such exploitive movies or start writing protests to Hollywood that this degrading of the art will stop.

how to roll a Costco....4
....and find an old dream underneath waiting to resurface.

This bittersweet film about a madman and his long-suffering daughter takes place against the backdrop of the ongoing "development" (ecological destruction) of Southern California, forcing the viewer to wonder: Who are the truly insane in this film?

A lot of humor goes with this grim implication (the scene with the cop on the golf course is hilarious, if short; the filmmakers also shot a funny golf course scene for SIDEWAYS). I also liked the McDonald's shift manager looking over Miranda's shoulder to make sure she assembled a quarter cheese correctly--this actually happened to me when I was sixteen, working in a Southern California franchise. Some things never change. Miranda and her father stand in for everyone who tries but fails to live in peace with the standardization and industrialization going on all around them.

They also have whatever it takes to "follow your bliss" and try to find some sense of meaning in an increasingly orderly and planned and therefore quite insane urbanized landscape literally covering over the once-verdant earth walked by the so-called savages who appreciated and tended it.

Incidentally, although shot as a romp about a parentified daughter trying to give her bipolar father a sense of purpose, the film bears out what I've written about in Deep California: Images and Ironies of Cross and Sword on El Camino Real and in Terrapsychology: Reengaging The Soul Of Place: what happens to traumatize a colonized and paved-over place never goes away until we find some way to heal the recurring themes by understanding them and reshaping them from within them. Costco and McDonald's are but commercialized and updated missions to convert the locals to a globalized existence that eats their souls and landscapes. The counter-mission resides in the loving heart pursuing its dreams or helping others to, as well-named Miranda does in this Californian tempest.

p.s. For those of you with some knowledge of California history: yes, you're right: no Spanish expeditions during the 1620s. After Cabrillo had been by, landing his ships but making no tours through California, Vizcaino did another sail-by in 1602. After that, no known Spanish incursions came through the state until 1769, when Junipero Serra and his merry band came colonizing. "Santa Clarita" got its name from the river they named "Santa Clara" as they marched through. Incidentally, Miranda's mission history lesson was correct, and not only for the Chumash of the Central Coast: most of the Indians who entered the missions never came out again.

p.p.s. The part about how California got its name is true. The bestseller Miranda refers to was called THE EXPLOITS OF ESPLANDIAN. The author's name was Montalvo. He died just before it got into print.